Alaska’s Summer Solstice 2008

A good summer solstice to you all: this is, in the northern hemisphere, the longest of day and for those of you Outside living further south . . . the shortest night for this year. Living in Anchorage the summer solstice comes tomorrow at 3:59 p.m. Alaska Daylight Time. That’s 11:59 p.m. Universal Time, and the US Naval Observatory says it’s the first time since 1896 that the summer solstice has landed on June 20th. The leap year puts the solstice just before the dawn of the 21st of June.

If you go further north, you will find even longer days where in Barrow the sun doesn’t set at all.

Tonight's quote comes from Shakespeare from a Mid-Summer's Night Dream (referring to the summer solstice):

“Whatever is dreamed on this night . . . will come to pass.”

Celebrate the longest day of the year in the Northern Hemisphere!

Enjoy and dream big under a full moon in the light of a new summer.

Ice

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